Jekku is a hefty, playful drinking sculpture carved from neodymium glass. Sini Majuri's a glass kuksa refuses to be rushed. It's not a casual sip; it's a pause you can't skip.
The mass is packed with tiny bubbles, each one catching light like a little mischief trapped in glass. Its surface is rough, uneven, and gloriously unpolished: light and shadow wrestle across it, making every glance a small adventure. The form is chunky and organic, fitting snugly in the hand, and its weight is an honest reminder that this is a thing that exists, right there in your palm.
Jekku is sculpted from a single lump of glass, no joints, no shortcuts: it is mass turned into vessel. In different lights, it teases violet and blue tones, as if deciding its mood with a sly wink.
The work is signed and titled on the base. Hot drinks are a no-go. Glass doesn't do drama, just gentle ribbing for the careful and the patient. Jekku prefers cool drinks, slow sips, and a bit of quiet mischief.
It's a chunky little rogue, about 11 cm high and 12 × 8 cm wide, an organic block full of weight, wit, and presence.